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Susan MacIntosh

Ed Tech bundle - 0 views

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    Stuff for Ed Tech, including IB
Thinnes Anne-Marie

The Future of Reading and Writing is Collaborative | Spotlight on Digital Media and Lea... - 0 views

  • “I think the definition of writing is shifting,” Boardman said. “I don’t think writing happens with just words anymore.
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      I think there is something in between multimedia and 5 paragraph essay
    • Thinnes Anne-Marie
       
      yes, this is just an other form of writing. 
    • Grace Yamato
       
      Students need both reading and writing collaboratively, but can they also do it own their own when they need to?
    • tasha cowdy
       
      Balance. But will future generations value hard-copy they way we, who have been brought up with it?
  • them to use video, music, recorded voices and whatever other media will best allow them to communicate effectively.
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      Question from Learning2.0....are we taking away imagination of the person "reading" if its all mutlimedia?
    • Jean Hino
       
      Can students still create their own images?
    • Thinnes Anne-Marie
       
      depending of the project, you always give some thought about what form it is going to take. The format, type of media, way to write is only wider
  • More specifically, it’s believing that collaboration and increased socialization around activities like reading and writing is a good idea.
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      Sometimes I don't want to be "social" when I am reading. I love the idea, but it's not the only way.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • , the writer is a synthesizer of the information and ideas
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      Is there a new word for this that isn't "writer"?
    • tasha cowdy
       
      yes, this is a conversation we have been having -is writing necessarily to do with letters, words? Do we need a new word?
  • Stephen Johnson argues that ideas get better the more they’re exposed to outside influences.
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      YES!
  • The Future of Reading and Writing is Collaborative
    • Rebekah Madrid
       
      Writing isn't a solitary act and reading is a social event. Books will be interactive and multimedia. Teachers will have to help students do this.
  • “Not just when you’re looking at the book, but also when you’re talking to people about the book or when you’re Googling things that occur to you as you read the book.”
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    The written word is coming to life by being a key part of multimedia," Boardman said. "When people can not only pick up something by the written word, but also listen to it, see it move across the screen or see someone's interpretation of that word through moving images, then I think it becomes much more alive.
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    "The age of the know-it-all author who went into her room for three months and figured something out that no one figured out, and had a whole idea that was hers alone - it's over."
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    It is not only the act of writing that is changing. It's reading,
Darren Laverick

News: 'The World Is Open' - Inside Higher Ed - 1 views

    • Kristen Blum
       
      What I'm thinking already is positive--greater access is important. Negative. What about face time? Will this erase time spent face-to-face?
  • What if someone listened to hundreds of podcasts, watched dozens of online lectures, explored countless online resources related to Introduction to Auditing, Astronomy 101, or Ancient Rome, and then discussed them with friends and family or reflected on many of them in an online forum or series of blog posts?
    • Kristen Blum
       
      Seems like they absolutely should get credit for this real-world learning
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • The jury is still out on the need for a guide or facilitator in open education. As co-editor of a handbook of blended learning, I can say that I personally believe that blended is best. Recent research seems to suggest that this is true
    • Kristen Blum
       
      Without a guide or facilitator, do you leave too much room for interpretation, making up the facts?
    • Madeleine Cox
       
      The very nature of this workshop suggests to me that we all need guides and human contact to a greater or lesser extent. I'm really enjoying these conversations - both online and in person!
    • Darren Laverick
       
      Open learning people connected uni sharing learning courses Informal learning skyrocketing open learning movement
    • Zoe Page
       
      Universities sharing courses, children can access them. Go with them or they will go without you
    • Girish Dogra
       
      This is great article about how education is evolving and how it will be in the next century. My apprehension is that without a human interference how effective will it be?
  • Technology is changing higher education
  • Leading universities are putting course materials or even entire courses online -- free.
Jamie Payne

Mrs Emery connects « Human - 0 views

    • toomuchdot
       
      Moddle and Blog? which is better?
    • Alex Guenther
       
      Moodle is for poodles!
  • vanity on the net
    • Ruth Ingulsrud
       
      Vanity, vanity... all is vanity. Facebook and blogging. Tweeting and texting. For a true introvert, this can't help but irritate me to a certain extent.
    • toomuchdot
       
      yes...too an extent
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Barrack
    • Alex Guenther
       
      Sp. - I hope she followed the right person!
    • Ruth Ingulsrud
       
      She should check the spelling on his birth certificate. :) I had a relative unfriend me for offering to send her a copy.
  • choice
  • choice,
    • Sunita Devadas
       
      yeah choice is the key operating word.
    • Alex Guenther
       
      That's why I like Twitter more than FaceBook - you can choose exactly who to interact with, rather than having it based on family / friends
    • toomuchdot
       
      too right!
  • The potential seemed endless.
    • toomuchdot
       
      Yep!
    • Alex Guenther
       
      Yep!
    • Jamie Payne
       
      Is Twitter the right tool to connect two classrooms on other sides of the world? I don't know.
  • ntroduced me to Twitter.
  • Twitter
    • Ruth Ingulsrud
       
      Twitter is for TWITS
Joy Seed

Minds on Fire: Open Education, the Long Tail, and Learning 2.0 (EDUCAUSE Review) | EDUC... - 1 views

  • learn the ropes” and become trusted members of the community through a process of legitimate peripheral participation.
  • which the students are able to use remotely to carry out their own scientific investigations
    • Garry Leroy Baker
       
      The benefits are clear for homeschooled students.
  • ...5 more annotations...
    • Joy Seed
       
      The internet provides an excellent opportunity to educate more people in more more subjects for less. It also enables to change the way that we teach and learn with a focus on collaboration and social learning. 
  • If access to higher education is a necessary element in expanding economic prosperity and improving the quality of life, then we need to address the problem of the growing global demand for education, as identified by Sir John Daniel.3
  • Fortunately, various initiatives launched over the past few years have created a series of building blocks that could provide the means for transforming the ways in which we provide education and support learning. Much of this activity has been enabled and inspired by the growth and evolution of the Internet, which has created a global “platform” that has vastly expanded access to all sorts of resources, including formal and informal educational materials. The Internet has also fostered a new culture of sharing, one in which content is freely contributed and distributed with few restrictions or costs.
  • Perhaps the simplest way to explain this concept is to note that social learning is based on the premise that our understanding of content is socially constructed through conversations about that content and through grounded interactions, especially with others, around problems or actions. The focus is not so much on what we are learning but on how we are learning.5
  • As more of learning becomes Internet-based, a similar pattern seems to be occurring. Whereas traditional schools offer a finite number of courses of study, the “catalog” of subjects that can be learned online is almost unlimited. There are already several thousand sets of course materials and modules online, and more are being added regularly.
Brendan Lea

World Without Walls: Learning Well with Others | Edutopia - 0 views

    • Brendan Lea
       
      There's a lot of information out there and we need to provide students with the critical thinking skills to successfully navigate between what is useful or true and that of utter rubbish. All the while encouraging them to expand their learning network, but not forgetting about the importance of face to face connections and hands on experiences.  
David

I'm So Totally, Digitally Close to You - Clive Thompson - NYTimes.com - 0 views

    • Jamie Raskin
       
      Sort of like a motion-sensor camera that only activates and records when there's a change in the environment...
    • Jamie Raskin
       
      Is it a coincidence that the rise of FB has been in line with the rise in reality tv?
    • Jamie Raskin
       
      Why do we care about other people's gossip?
  • “Frankly, I don’t need to know or care that Billy broke up with Sally, and Ted has become friends with Steve.”
    • Adam Clark
       
      While some people don't want to know this kind of info. Many people apparently do. 
  • ...29 more annotations...
  • When I spoke to him, Zuckerberg argued that News Feed is central to Facebook’s success. “Facebook has always tried to push the envelope,” he said.
    • Adam Clark
       
      I'm wondering how the "news feed" of facebook has influenced our expectations for other contexts. Has it made us expect efficiency? Has it made us lazy? 
  • Users’ worries about their privacy seemed to vanish within days, boiled away by their excitement at being so much more connected to their friends
  • social norms catching up with what technology is capable of.”
  • In essence, Facebook users didn’t think they wanted constant, up-to-the-minute updates on what other people are doing. Yet when they experienced this sort of omnipresent knowledge, they found it intriguing and addictive. Why?
  • “I really hate it when people clip their nails on the bus”
    • Adam Clark
       
      For me this is facebook type material. To my way of thinking Twitter should make me better - better informed, better connected, a better professional, human being etc.
    • Jamie Raskin
       
      I think it all adds up to a growing informality in our day to day communications... brevity, immediacy, intimacy
  • The phenomenon is quite different from what we normally think of as blogging, because a blog post is usually a written piece, sometimes quite long: a statement of opinion, a story, an analysis.
  • Haley discovered that he was beginning to sense the rhythms of his friends’ lives in a way he never had before.
    • Jamie Raskin
       
      This is not the promoted use of Twitter... I always see it as an intellectual/professional connection tool, but is that just the way it's evolved?
  • But they also discovered that the little Ping-Ponging messages felt even more intimate than a phone call.
  • the idea of using communication tools as a form of “co-presence”
  • Ambient intimacy becomes a way to “feel less alone,” as more than one Facebook and Twitter user told me.
  • “I have a rule,” she told me. “I either have to know who you are, or I have to know of you.”
    • Adam Clark
       
      What rules do other's have about their social media? We were talking about this kind of thing in G9 PSHE the other day
  • awareness tools aren’t as cognitively demanding as an e-mail message.
  • “Things like Twitter have actually given me a much bigger social circle. I know more about more people than ever before.”
    • Jamie Raskin
       
      Are these gratifying relationships? I don't know that I have gratifying relationships built on snippets of info...
  • What sort of relationships are these? What does it mean to have hundreds of “friends” on Facebook? What kind of friends are they, anyway?
    • Adam Clark
       
      How do the fact that we are wrestling with these questions impact our relationships IRL (in real life)? Are they all in real life or are they distinct? 
  • This makes them skimmable, like newspaper headlines; maybe you’ll read them all, maybe you’ll skip so
    • David
       
      twitter feeds are "skimmable", don't have to read in great detail
  • psychological studies have confirmed that human groupings naturally tail off at around 150 people: the “Dunbar number,” as it is known. Are people who use Facebook and Twitter increasing their Dunbar number, because they can so easily keep track of so many more people?
  • “I outsource my entire life,” she said. “I can solve any problem on Twitter in six minutes.”
  • This rapid growth of weak ties can be a very good thing. Sociologists have long found that “weak ties” greatly expand your ability to solve problems.
  • Parasocial relationships can use up some of the emotional space in our Dunbar number, crowding out real-life people.
  • “They can observe you, but it’s not the same as knowing you.”
  • the sheer ease of following her friends’ updates online has made her occasionally lazy about actually taking the time to visit them in person.
  • It brings back the dynamics of small-town life, where everybody knows your business
  • a culture of people who know much more about themselves.
    • Adam Clark
       
      Also maybe also a culture of narcissists.  http://www.narcissismepidemic.com/aboutbook.html
  • t’s like the Greek dictum to “know thyself,” or the therapeutic concept of mindfulness. (Indeed, the question that floats eternally at the top of Twitter’s Web site
  • The act of stopping several times a day to observe what you’re feeling or thinking can become, after weeks and weeks, a sort of philosophical act.
  • “It drags you out of your own head,
ghoskins

elearnspace. Connectivism: A Learning Theory for the Digital Age - 1 views

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    our reading
tasha cowdy

iPads in Kindergarten - 1 views

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    Using iPads in Kindegarten
Chie Mizukoshi

E-books - 0 views

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    Please enjoy E-books translated into other foreign languages
Alex Guenther

Seth's Blog: Back to (the wrong) school | Diigo - 0 views

    • Alex Guenther
       
      Funny how disconnect is a noun and connect isn't
Kaori Sensei

dy/dan - 1 views

shared by Kaori Sensei on 17 Sep 11 - Cached
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    Lots of ideas for Maths teachers.
Jamie Payne

Repairing Japan's image, one teacher at a time - Canada - CBC News - 1 views

    • Jamie Payne
       
      It's great to see people who have lived in Japan, going back there to help in the recovery effort.
Ruth Ingulsrud

Elementary Writing » Blog Archive » Famous Love Poems & The Stories Behind Them - 0 views

    • Ruth Ingulsrud
       
      Lit. Lesson: Good example for lesson on how to capture the inner qualities of a subject in one's writing; going deeper and increasing significance.
David

Google Reader (1000+) - 0 views

shared by David on 17 Sep 11 - No Cached
  • This note is for those of you who have been following the inaugural Library 2.011 Worldwide Conference.
    • David
       
      Awesome!
Di Suzuki

Facebook (3) - 0 views

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    This is one way Tsukuba International School is extending our network and the ability to utilise it's rich resources.
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